All men are created by LORD God, and are created equal by the LORD God in being endowed by the LORD God with unalienable Right of Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness equally.
Let's pray in the name of Jesus Christ for a decentralised China with no nukes, no military and no Leninist organisation. May LORD God's light shine on China. Welcome to follow CPAJim at X: https://x.com/CPAJim2021
For decades, the geopolitical discourse surrounding Chinese-speaking societies has been heavily constrained by a single, monolithic narrative: the historical inevitability of a unified state. Within this paradigm, "unification" is elevated to a supreme moral and historical mandate, leaving little room for alternative visions of governance.
However, when we strip away the grand mythologies of dynastic history and return to the foundational principles of modern civilization and international law, a clear truth emerges: any distinct Chinese-speaking region or population, possessing effective governance and acting on the free will of its people, holds the absolute legal right and practical viability to establish independent statehood and sovereign identity.
This claim to self-determination and independent sovereignty is not merely a modern political aspiration; it is deeply rooted in the legal mechanics of the 1933 Montevideo Convention and echoes the profound philosophical principles set forth in the 1776 American Declaration of Independence.
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1. The Jeffersonian Principle and the "Consent of the Governed"
In 1776, Thomas Jefferson penned a declaration that redefined the relationship between human beings and the state:
> "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.—That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed..."
The bedrock of this political philosophy is that no government possesses an inherent, eternal right to rule a people based purely on historical ties, geography, or shared bloodlines. When a government consistently fails to protect the fundamental liberties of a distinct populace, or actively threatens their democratic way of life with militaristic coercion, the people possess an inherent right to alter or abolish that political bond and institute new governance.
When the thirteen American colonies chose to separate from Great Britain, they did not do so because they lacked cultural or linguistic ties to the mother country; they were, in fact, culturally and linguistically British. Their separation was driven by systemic tyranny, taxation without representation, and the violation of their fundamental rights as free individuals.
By the same token, shared language and ancestry are not a legal mandate for forced political mergers. Distinct Chinese-speaking populations have every right to reject the authority of a centralized, authoritarian regime if that regime compromises their freedom and human dignity.
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2. The Legal Framework: Effective Governance Over Historical Myths
Under modern international law, arguments relying on "ancient historical claims" hold remarkably little weight in determining contemporary sovereignty. Instead, the international legal order prioritizes current effective control and the right to self-determination.
The Declarative Theory of the Montevideo Convention
According to Article 1 of the 1933 Montevideo Convention on the Rights and Duties of States**, an entity qualifies as a sovereign state under international law the moment it meets four objective criteria:
A permanent population
A defined territory
A government
The capacity to enter into relations with other states
Crucially, Article 3 of the Convention establishes the Declarative Theory of Statehood:
"The political existence of the state is independent of recognition by the other states."
If a Chinese-speaking region already possesses a functioning, democratically elected government that exercises stable public authority over a defined territory, commands its own defense forces, collects its own taxes, and independently conducts foreign affairs, it is *already* a sovereign state in the eyes of international jurisprudence. Its legitimacy does not depend on the permission, historical approval, or ideological validation of a neighboring superpower.
The Principle of Intertemporal Law
Furthermore, the doctrine of Intertemporal Law dictates that historical acts must be judged by the laws of the time they occurred, not by contemporary standards. The tributary networks, imperial protectorates, or loose feudal arrangements of past centuries do not equate to the exclusive, legally defined territorial sovereignty of the modern Westphalian system. Attempting to draw modern borders based on centuries-old imperial maps is not only legally invalid but a direct disruption of international peace.
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3. The Practical Viability: Plurality as a Global Norm
Beyond legal theory, the division of a single cultural or linguistic group into multiple independent sovereign nations is an everyday reality and a cornerstone of global stability—not an anomaly.
The Anglo-Saxon world alone features the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand—all separate sovereign entities sharing a common language and cultural root. Similarly, the German language and cultural heritage span Germany, Austria, and parts of Switzerland. These nations operate independently and successfully, often fostering deeper, more constructive partnerships precisely because they interact as sovereign equals rather than subjugated provinces.
For distinct Chinese-speaking regions, independent governance offers profound practical advantages:
Tailored Governance: Free from the demands of a centralized empire or aggressive geopolitical ambitions, local authorities can design judicial and social systems tailored precisely to the welfare and values of their own citizens.
Economic Integration: In the modern globalized economy, a nation's prosperity depends on its adherence to international trade law, transparency, and a stable regulatory environment—not the physical size of its territory. A distinct sovereign entity can seamlessly engage with global supply chains on its own terms.
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Conclusion
The true measure of a civilized international order is the protection of human liberty and pluralistic governance over the preservation of anachronistic empires.
As the Declaration of Independence reminds us, when a long train of abuses evinces a design to reduce a people under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to provide new guards for their future security. For the distinct populations of the Chinese-speaking world, the pursuit of independent statehood based on stable self-governance and popular consent is not a radical provocation. It is a legitimate exercise of international law and a brave continuation of the universal struggle for human freedom.
In the theater of international relations, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has long masterheaded a narrative of being the ultimate bulwark against fascism and militarism. A staple of Beijing’s wolf-warrior diplomacy and domestic propaganda is accusing its democratic neighbors of allowing the "ghost of militarism to return." However, in political psychology, there exists a classic phenomenon known as psychological projection: the specific sins a regime most aggressively projects onto its adversaries are almost always the exact blueprints of its own internal reality.
When you peel back the ideological veneer of "socialism with Chinese characteristics" and perform a penetrative verification of its foundational and modern legislative records, a chilling geopolitical reality emerges. The People’s Republic of China (PRC) is currently the most heavily organized Leninist-Militarist state on Earth. Its self-proclaimed "People’s Democratic Dictatorship" is, in structural reality, a highly mutated, technologically upgraded reincarnation of pre-WWII Japanese militarism.
I. The Original Sin: 1949 and the Foundations of Uniformed Governance
The militaristic nature of the PRC is not a Western conceptual invention; it is a matter of historical record documented by the CCP itself.
According to the September 1949 coverage by the People’s Daily (the central organ of the CCP), reporting on the first plenary session of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC)—the very body that established the foundational architecture of the state—the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) held a staggering, independent voting bloc of 71 delegates. This included 14 high-ranking commanders from the PLA Headquarters, such as Zhu De and Nie Rongzhen, alongside field army commanders like He Long.
During this foundational assembly, the address delivered by He Long, the chief delegate of the PLA First Field Army, shattered the universal, civilized norm of civilian control over the military. He Long openly declared to the assembly:
"...We have already fought our way close to the borders of Xinjiang and Sichuan! We guarantee to this grand assembly: ...if the remnants of the enemy dare to continue resisting, we will resolutely, thoroughly, cleanly, and completely annihilate them."
"...The Northwest is a vast land, rich in mineral resources and diverse in ethnicities... We guarantee to this assembly: our First Field Army possesses not only the resolve to rapidly complete the glorious task of liberating the entire Northwest, but will also... strive to develop the Northwest."
In any legitimate constitutional or democratic state, the military functions as a defensive instrument subordinate to a civilian administration. It does not act as an independent political corporate entity capable of issuing sovereign guarantees or mapping out postwar territorial acquisition. He Long’s speech laid bare the DNA of the regime: from day one, the military was not just an instrument of state defense; it was an autonomous political faction that claimed direct monopoly over postwar territorial administration, resource extraction, and economic development. This is the classic definition of a militarist junta wrapped in a party shell.
II. The Dual-Track Legislature: The Unbroken Institutionalization of the "Gun"
This militaristic blueprint was seamlessly transferred from the 1949 CPPCC to the 1954 First National People’s Congress (NPC), and it remains deeply embedded within the regime’s legislative cells today.
In a normal constitutional state, any active-duty military officer wishing to enter politics must first retire from active service and run as a civilian. In the PRC's NPC, however, the legislative body has permanently institutionalized a unique "cross-infiltration" model. According to official data compiled by the PRC Ministry of National Defense, the military’s control over the legislature operates through a dual mechanism: a dedicated, vertical PLA Delegation, supplemented by an omnipotent, horizontal "parasitic" presence within civilian provincial delegations.
The Parasitic Roster: Case of the 2nd NPC Sichuan Delegation
While the official record states that the PLA delegation for the 1st and 2nd NPCs was nominally limited to 60 members, this was a deliberate statistical camouflage. The Ministry of National Defense openly admits that numerous top generals were hidden inside civilian provincial delegations.
A penetrative audit of the 2nd NPC Sichuan Provincial Delegation reveals that this single civilian delegation was covertly packed with a staggering military junta: two Field Marshals (Zhu De, Nie Rongzhen), one Senior General (Luo Ruiqing), two Generals, and two Lieutenant Generals.
This means that beneath the guise of regional civilian representation sat a fully functional regional military command theater. Similarly, during the 1st NPC, prominent Marshals and Generals were distributed across civilian blocs—Chen Yi in Shanghai, Luo Ruiqing in Hebei, Yang Chengwu in Tianjin, and Wei Guoqing in Guangxi.
When the regime entered the chaotic military-junta rule of the Cultural Revolution, this camouflage was discarded entirely: the number of military seats spiked violently from 120 in the 3rd NPC to 486 in the 4th NPC, and peaked at 503 seats in the 5th NPC, reflecting a total military takeover of the state machinery.
In the contemporary era, this dual-track apparatus has consolidated into a massive, monolithic institution. According to the official roster for the 14th National People's Congress (2023–2028), the PLA and People’s Armed Police (PAP) delegation holds an overt bloc of 281 seats, making it the single largest unified interest group in the legislature.
The modern instantiation of this is terrifyingly expansive. According to the official roster published for the 14th National People's Congress, the PLA and People’s Armed Police (PAP) delegation holds a massive, monolithic bloc of 281 seats. This makes the military the single largest unified interest group within the nominal legislature.
The structural reality of this was put on full display during the opening days of the 14th NPC’s Session. On March 3, General Zhang Shengmin, Vice Chairman of the Central Military Commission (CMC) and head of the PLA-PAP legislative delegation, explicitly instructed the military delegates to elevate their political stance and "vigorously push to transform the Party's propositions into state will and national action." A few days later, on March 7—well before the Supreme People’s Court reports were even voted on—Xi Jinping personally attended the plenary session of this uniformed military delegation to align strategic objectives.
In Western political logic, the "state will" represents the collective consensus of the electorate achieved through civilian debate. In Beijing’s Leninist-Militarist model, the "state will" is merely the dictates of the Party, weaponized and legalized through a permanent, institutionalized legislative bloc of 281 uniformed commanders. The state does not own an army; the army owns a state.
III. The Spoils of Militarism: General Wang Wenquan and the Modern War Machine
A militarist state cannot survive purely on ideological coercion; it requires a highly sophisticated internal mechanism of rewards, emergency mobilization, and institutional incentives for its warrior caste. The rapid, unconventional ascent of General Wang Wenquan provides a perfect textbook case of this modern military-spoils system.
During the 13th NPC, Wang Wenquan—then serving as the Political Commissar of the 72nd Group Army—openly proposed from the legislative floor that the state must overhaul its military compensation structures to "heavily favor and tilt resources toward those executing direct combat, live-fire drills, and major non-war military operations, treating with absolute generosity those with merit in war-preparedness and training." This is the unvarnished logic of a militarist regime: using the legislative machinery of the state to legally siphon the wealth of civilian taxpayers directly into the pockets of the military caste to incentivize aggressive posture.
Wang’s subsequent promotion reveals the deeper, darker mechanics of the regime's emergency and bio-defense infrastructure. Despite holding only the rank of Lieutenant General, Wang was leapfrogged by Xi Jinping into the powerful Central Committee and handed the reins of the Joint Logistics Support Force of the CMC.
The Joint Logistics Support Force is effectively the "Emergency Management Department" of the military—the nerve center for strategic supply, bio-defense, and rapid response. Wang’s primary political asset for this massive promotion was his role as a key orchestrator in an event that featured highly sensitive bio-defense drills and emergency response deployments right before the global outbreak of COVID-19. Because his performance in handling these high-stakes, opaque military-emergency operations was deemed "excellent" by the core leadership, he was rewarded with the keys to the regime’s most critical logistical and mobilization apparatus.
IV. Conclusion: The Ultimate Geopolitical Projection
When the CCP’s propaganda apparatus relentlessly warns the world about the threat of foreign militarism, it is performing a highly sophisticated geopolitical smoke screen. By forcing the world to focus on historical ghosts elsewhere, Beijing successfully masks the heavily armed leviathan operating right before our eyes.
The line running from He Long’s 1949 declaration of territorial dominance to General Zhang Shengmin’s 2026 directive to enforce "the Party’s will as state law" is completely unbroken. It is reinforced by an institutional framework where 281 uniformed generals vote on national laws, and where figures like Wang Wenquan are elevated based on their execution of shadowy emergency military maneuvers.
The Western international relations apparatus has long recognized this behavior pattern. It is the reason why the strategic architecture of the "First Island Chain"—originally erected by democratic maritime powers to contain the expansionism of Imperial Tokyo—was able to seamlessly pivot to containing Beijing. The West understood that the ideological label had changed, but the structural threat remained identical: a continental power utilizing a completely regimented society, powered by a Leninist party apparatus, and driven by an absolute militarist core. The ghost has not returned in Tokyo; it has simply found a new, far more dangerous vessel in Beijing.
V. The Civil-Military Divergence: Philadelphia vs. Beijing
To fully grasp the anomalous nature of the PRC's militarist structure, one must contrast its leadership with the founding architects of the United States. The ideological and structural divergence between the American Founding Fathers and the CCP's military junta represents two opposite paths of civilization.
The American Revolutionary leaders were, at their core, civilians—lawyers, merchants, scientists, and planters. Men like Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and Benjamin Franklin approached governance through the lens of constitutional law and social contract. When George Washington, the Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army, won the Revolutionary War in 1783, he performed an act that stunned the monarchies of Europe: he voluntarily resigned his military commission to the civilian Continental Congress and returned to his farm. This established the sacred Western tenet of civilian control over the military. The uniform was an instrument for securing liberty, not a license to rule.
The CCP’s leadership path was the precise inversion. Generals like He Long, Zhu De, and Lin Biao were career warlords and ideologues forged by decades of absolute internal warfare. Upon achieving victory in 1949, they did not dissolve their military commands; they weaponized their field armies into permanent, parasitic legislative blocs within the civilian state apparatus.
While Washington chose the path of Cincinnatus—returning power to civilian hands—the CCP leadership chose to institutionalize the "gun" within the state's DNA. This is why, while American constitutionalism successfully shackled military power under civilian congressional oversight, the Chinese Leninist model evolved into a mechanism where, as evidenced in the 2026 NPC sessions, 281 uniformed commanders dictate national laws under the auspices of a militarized vanguard. The American Founders built a nation defined by law; the CCP built a military fortress disguised as a republic.
西方的邏輯定性:
在國際法上,這種「因為害怕未來被圍堵,所以先發制人踐踏他國主權」的邏輯,是標準的攻勢防禦(Offensive Defense)。因此,歷史出現了驚人的法理對稱:1930年代日本侵華,被國際聯盟(League of Nations)定性為侵略;1951年中共出兵朝鮮對抗聯合國軍,被聯合國大會通過第498號決議,直接定性為「侵略者」(Aggressor)。在國際法理的框架下,兩者的非法性質完全一致。
1783年獨立戰爭勝利後,華盛頓做出了震驚歐洲君主世界的偉大舉動:他拒絕了部下擁立他為國王的建議,前往邦聯議會,正式交還了大陸軍總司令的權杖,解甲歸田,回到了維吉尼亞的弗農山莊。這確立了西方文明中「文官治軍(Civilian Control of the Military)」與「軍隊國家化」的最高憲政原則——軍人只是國家的僕人,戰爭結束,軍裝卸下,權力必須歸還給文官政府。
The political structure of the People's Republic of China (PRC) is often described by its supporters as a system of "people's democratic dictatorship" under the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC). However, critics argue that this characterization obscures the fundamentally militarized nature of the Chinese political system.
One of the defining features of the PRC is the central role of the armed forces in political life. Since the establishment of the state in 1949, military representatives have occupied positions within major political institutions, including the National People's Congress and other organs of state power. Critics contend that this arrangement reflects a political tradition in which authority ultimately rests on armed power rather than on competitive elections, constitutional checks and balances, or independent civil institutions.
From this perspective, the PRC resembles a party-state whose organizational principles combine Leninist political control with a strong military foundation. The Chinese Communist Party maintains the doctrine that "the Party commands the gun," emphasizing that the armed forces are subordinate not to the state alone but to the ruling party itself. Critics argue that this close fusion of party and military authority differentiates China from many modern constitutional states and contributes to a system in which political legitimacy is closely linked to coercive power.
Some commentators go further, drawing parallels between contemporary China and historical forms of militarism. They argue that the persistent influence of military institutions in governance creates structural similarities to earlier militarized regimes. According to this interpretation, the concentration of political authority, the prioritization of national strength, and the integration of military power into state institutions suggest the existence of a modernized form of militarized governance.
The Chinese Communist Party often presents the Wuhan lockdown as proof of its competence. In reality, the official narrative surrounding Wuhan reveals something far more disturbing: a political system obsessed not with protecting citizens, but with preserving Party control at any cost.
The interview with PLA political officer Wang Guoming is remarkably candid. What is presented as a discussion of pandemic response quickly becomes a blueprint for political domination. Every lesson drawn from the COVID-19 crisis points toward the same conclusion: the CCP views every emergency as an opportunity to expand its power.
The first thing that stands out is the complete fusion of Party, military, and government authority. Wang Guoming was not merely a military officer. He was inserted into the Wuhan People’s Congress while serving as a senior political commissar. This reflects a fundamental reality of the Chinese system: there is no meaningful separation between civilian governance and military power. The People’s Liberation Army does not belong to the Chinese people. It belongs to the Communist Party.
More revealing is the regime’s obsession with ideological control. Throughout the interview, Wang repeatedly praises “the Party’s leadership” and “Xi Jinping’s command.” Missing entirely is any acknowledgment that the outbreak was initially concealed from the public. Doctors who attempted to warn society were silenced. Information was suppressed. Critical weeks were wasted. Yet the official narrative erases these facts and transforms a preventable disaster into a propaganda victory.
Perhaps the most chilling section concerns public opinion management. Wang boasts that authorities dealt with more than twenty major “negative public opinion incidents.” This language exposes the CCP mindset. Public criticism is not viewed as valuable feedback. It is treated as a threat to political stability. Independent information is not considered a public right. It is considered an enemy to be neutralized.
The interview openly advocates seizing the “high ground” of public opinion, ensuring that the Party’s voice reaches every household, and preventing alternative narratives from gaining traction. In democratic societies, governments seek public trust through transparency. The CCP seeks compliance through information monopoly. Truth becomes secondary to political usefulness.
Even more alarming is how the Party interprets a public health crisis as preparation for future warfare. COVID-19 is repeatedly described as a “people’s war” and a model for national defense mobilization. The regime’s takeaway from the pandemic was not that transparency saves lives. It was that society can be organized, monitored, and commanded on a massive scale.
Under the banner of emergency response, the CCP developed mechanisms for integrating military units, local governments, private companies, logistics networks, communication systems, and public opinion management into a single command structure. What emerged was not simply a health response. It was a demonstration of total-state mobilization.
Authoritarian regimes often justify expanded powers during crises. What makes the CCP different is that these powers rarely disappear afterward. Every emergency becomes an argument for more surveillance. Every crisis becomes a justification for more censorship. Every challenge becomes an excuse for deeper Party penetration into society.
The Wuhan experience did not prove the superiority of the CCP system. It exposed its defining characteristic: power comes first.
The Party that suppressed early warnings now celebrates itself as humanity’s savior. The system that controls information now claims credit for effective communication. The government that failed to stop the outbreak in its earliest stage points to the lockdown as evidence of success.
This is the central paradox of Communist Party rule. It often presents solutions to problems that its own political structure helped create. Then it demands gratitude for fixing them.
Wuhan was not merely a public health crisis. It was a rare moment when the CCP accidentally revealed how it truly sees the world: society is a resource to be mobilized, information is a weapon to be controlled, and every institution—from hospitals to businesses to the military—exists ultimately to serve the Party’s monopoly on power.
The lesson of Wuhan is not that authoritarianism works. The lesson is that authoritarianism can transform even a human tragedy into a tool for political expansion.
The most troubling aspect of the Wuhan story is that the structures revealed during the pandemic did not suddenly emerge in 2020. They had been built years earlier.
By 2018, senior PLA officers were already serving as delegates in Wuhan's local legislature. Military representatives openly advocated deeper military-civil fusion. By early 2020, Wuhan Garrison Commander He Songli had become a member of the municipal People's Congress presidium while simultaneously presiding over Party military meetings emphasizing absolute Party control, military-civil integration, and mobilization readiness.
This chronology matters. It suggests that the extensive military involvement witnessed during the COVID-19 crisis was not an extraordinary emergency measure. It was the activation of a political architecture that had already been constructed.
The pandemic therefore served as more than a public-health emergency. It became a real-world stress test for a system designed to merge military authority, political power, economic resources, logistics networks, and public opinion management under a single Party-led command structure.
What emerged in Wuhan was not simply crisis response. It was a demonstration of how the CCP envisions governing society itself: as a permanently mobilizable system in which the distinction between civilian and military spheres gradually disappears.
To the outside world, China’s Great Firewall (GFW) often looks like a monolithic web of algorithms—a triumph of censorship technology. But to understand why it exists, you have to look past the code. The GFW is not a mere policy tool; it is a manifestation of a party-military-state system that fuses law, physical infrastructure, and raw military power to ensure regime survival.
To dismantle the Firewall, one must understand the structural pillars that keep it standing, right down to the modern mechanics of its rubber-stamp parliament.
The Constitutional Euphemism: "People's Democratic Dictatorship" as a Party-Military-State System
To understand the institutional DNA of this regime, one must decode its foundational constitutional label: the "People's Democratic Dictatorship" (人民民主专政). While democratic theory dictates a strict separation of powers, the National People’s Congress (NPC) acts as an omnipotent lever of ultimate authority, holding unchallengeable power over the legislative, executive, and judicial branches.
However, this "People's" power is entirely subverted by the composition of the parliament itself. By integrating a massive, heavily armed bloc of delegates from the People’s Liberation Army (PLA)—who answer directly to the CCP’s Central Military Commission (CMC)—the legislature is systematically militarized.
The duality of "Democracy + Dictatorship" functions not as a contradiction, but as a deliberate political machine:
The "Democracy" Layer: This is the administrative outward-facing theater. The state utilizes the NPC to ratify civil laws, approve budgets, and present an illusion of popular representation and legislative procedure to the global community.
The "Dictatorship" Layer: This is the internal operational reality driven by the military-party nexus. Because the military delegates act as the enforcement backbone within the parliament under the direct command of the CMC and Xi Jinping, they ensure that the "will of the state" never deviates from the "will of the Party."
Thus, the NPC is not a parliament of the people; it is a mechanism where the state's legislative, administrative, and judicial organs are permanently held hostage by the regime's military wing. The "People's Democratic Dictatorship" is the legal euphemism for a Party-Military-State system—a framework where democratic facades are legally mandated to manufacture consent, while military-backed dictatorial power stands ready behind the curtain to crush any deviation from the Party line.
The Forensic Audit of a Dictatorship: A CPA’s Perspective on the Chinese Constitution
To a certified public accountant or professional auditor, Article 1 and the Preamble of the PRC Constitution are not dry ideological statements—they are a legally binding confession of absolute control and corporate fraud.
Under international auditing standards, when determining the "Ultimate Controlling Party" of an entity, auditors look past the nominal owners to identify who holds the actual power to direct strategic decisions. Article 1 claims the state is "led by the working class... based on the alliance of workers and peasants." Yet, the Preamble immediately delivers the definitive audit trail: every action must occur "under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party" and be guided by its official dogmas, culminating in "Xi Jinping Thought."
In the language of forensic auditing, this converts the entire nation into a Special Purpose Entity (SPE) entirely consolidated under the balance sheet of the CCP.
Furthermore, this "People's Democratic Dictatorship" structure represents a total failure of internal controls (Material Weakness). The "Democracy" layer merely manufactures fraudulent vouchers of public compliance, while the "Dictatorship" layer utilizes raw military and judicial violence to liquidate anyone attempting a genuine audit of the regime.
For international tribunals and global asset-tracing investigators looking to hold the regime accountable for its historic and biosecurity atrocities—from the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre to the highly suspect militarized pathogen research between 2015 and 2019—this constitutional text serves as the ultimate Exhibit for liability attribution. The CCP has legally signed off on its own absolute command over every state mechanism, permanently barring them from claiming "lack of knowledge" or "unauthorized local actions." The Party is, by its own supreme law, 100% liable for the actions of the state.
1. The Legal Facade: How "Cybersecurity" Became an Ideological Weapon
The foundational legal blueprint for China’s internet censorship was laid over two decades ago. On December 28, 2000, the Ninth National People's Congress Standing Committee adopted the Decision on Maintaining Internet Security. At the helm was Li Peng—a political heavyweight notorious for his role in the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown.
Under his leadership, this decision permanently weaponized the term "cybersecurity" within Chinese jurisprudence. In the jargon of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), cybersecurity does not mean only protecting infrastructure from malware; it means information content security.
By legalizing the suppression of any speech deemed a threat to "state security" or "social stability," this decree granted all levels of government the mandatory authority to deploy technical blockades against dissent. Whether it is an investigative journalistic truth, a critical opinion, or an alternative political viewpoint, its suppression is anchored in this legal precedent.
2. The Infrastructural Levers: Electricity, Corporate Coercion, and the Smart Grid
The regime's control is also correlated with monopolizing critical physical infrastructure, particularly the power grid. Historically, state elites—most notably the Li Peng family—held immense sway over China’s power sector, establishing state-backed monopolies that extracted massive profits through opaque pricing structures.
This control over the electricity grid serves two distinct political functions:
The Illusion of Bread and Butter (Opinion Diversion): By steering public discourse toward immediate, everyday livelihood issues—such as the fluctuation of electricity bills or utility monopolies—the state creates a psychological buffer. While the public is preoccupied debating utility prices, systemic critiques regarding the erosion of free speech, the lack of independent public oversight, and the resulting policy blunders are effectively sidelined.
Infrastructure as a Weapon of Coercion: Data centers, tech giants, and internet service providers all have one fatal vulnerability: they require massive, uninterrupted power. The state's absolute monopoly over the grid operates as an existential threat. Any tech firm or private entity that fails to comply with the NPC’s internet censorship directives faces the immediate risk of being unplugged—crippling their business overnight.
Today, the aggressive nationwide rollout of smart meters and automated grids has made this micro-level surveillance and technical coercion even more explicit, giving the state a digital kill-switch over the physical spaces of individuals and corporations alike.
3. The NPC System: A Rubber-Stamp Parliament Backed by Bayonets
The total illusion of this legal framework was fully illuminated during the Fourth Session of the 14th National People's Congress. While framed on paper as the "highest organ of state power," the NPC operates as an echo chamber heavily dictated by a party-military nexus.
Within the 14th NPC, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and the People’s Armed Police Force delegation wield immense institutional weight, boasting 281 active military delegates. According to official military reports, when this powerful delegation was formed, General Zhang Shengmin, Vice Chairman of the Central Military Commission (CMC), explicitly instructed the military delegates to "elevate their political stance" and ensure they "translate the Party's propositions into national will and action."
This is the exact operational pathway of totalitarian power:
March 3: The 281 military delegates assemble under strict CMC instructions to act as political enforcers inside the legislature.
March 7: Xi Jinping personally attends the plenary meeting of the PLA and Armed Police delegation, ensuring total alignment. Xi does not just command the military on the battlefield; he directly dictates how these 281 lawmakers vote, propose bills, and enforce the Party’s will over civilian delegates.
March 12: The NPC officially reviews and passes the work report of Zhang Jun, President of the Supreme People's Court (SPC). The report explicitly demands that the judiciary operates under the "absolute leadership of the CCP" and aligns completely with "Xi Jinping Thought on the Rule of Law."
This iron-clad loop explains why the NPC is structurally incapable of reforming corporate transparency or protecting private property. Under Judicial Interpretation No. 3 of China's Company Law, the courts explicitly legitimize and protect nominee shareholder structures (equity proxy/代持关系). This allows the true, beneficial owners of corporations to remain completely hidden behind artificial "front" owners.
The 281 gun-bearing lawmakers will never vote to repeal these loopholes. Why? Because these opaque legal cloaks are highly useful to the military-intelligence apparatus. They allow the state to buy off foreign assets, funnel money into global influence networks (such as CodePink, compromised international scholars, or former Western military personnel), and move black market funds globally while evading Western regulatory scrutiny.
4. Why the Party-Military-State System Is Structurally Incapable of Universal Values
To expect this system to suddenly embrace free speech, respect global non-proliferation treaties, or apologize for its historical or biological misdeeds is a fundamental misunderstanding of the regime's political DNA. The party-military-state cannot comply with these norms because doing so would trigger immediate structural collapse.
The Incompatibility of Truth: Acknowledging the historical reality and apologizing for deep-seated atrocities—such as the starvation of civilians during the Siege of Changchun (1948), the war crime of the Korean War (1950s) committed by CCP's military force, or the slaughter of students during the Tiananmen Square Massacre (1989)—would shatter the myth of the CCP's historical infallibility. In a totalitarian system, admitting a mistake is not seen as reform; it is a structural vulnerability that invites revolution.
The Inevitability of Regional Aggression: Geopolitically, the regime is bound by a law of survival. The existence of prosperous, free democracies right on its doorstep—specifically Taiwan and South Korea—presents a constant, living refutation of the CCP's narrative that Asian societies require authoritarian rule to thrive. Annexing Taiwan and dominating Southeast Asian Sea (aka South China Sea) and the Korean Peninsula are systemic imperatives designed to erase ideological alternatives and secure total regional hegemony.
Institutional Deception as Biosecurity:
• Yes, RaTG13 virus doesn’t exist in the nature, while a short sequence called 4991 (not whole coronavirus sequence) exists, which RdRp segment is introduced in SARS2 as a unique therapeutic target. Later, 4991 is also used to create the whole sequence of RaTG13. • Zhoushan bat… https://t.co/Q8XGurCoPapic.twitter.com/qe99FnHEAD
This exact same mechanism of denial governs the state's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Between 2015 and 2019, the aggressive militarization of biological research institutes involved intense gathering, isolating, and altering of bat coronaviruses (such as the lineages related to Zhoushan strains). Whether the pandemic originated from deliberate virus release, a catastrophic laboratory accident or a compromised biosecurity environment, the state's default reflex was hardwired into its survival protocol: silence the whistleblowers, destroy the baseline data, and lock down information. For a regime that answers to no one, transparency is a suicide pact; it would invite trillions in global liability, crippling international sanctions, and absolute moral bankruptcy.
The Final Verdict: Why Technology Alone Won't Break the Wall
The Great Firewall is the digital shield of an integrated techno-totalitarian machine where the party, the military, the judiciary, and infrastructure monopolies function as a single organism.
Therefore, bypassing the GFW cannot be achieved solely through technical workarounds, better VPNs, or internal legal lobbying. The firewall will only fall when the overarching architecture that birthed it is dismantled.
Historically, neutralizing a militarized, nuclear-armed party-state has never been achieved through gentle, internal policy shifts. As seen in the post-WWII transitions of 20th-century totalitarian regimes, true liberation requires the total neutralization of the regime's military and nuclear leverage, a sweeping realignment of global geopolitics, and direct international democratic intervention to pave the way for a genuinely open, transparent, and free society.
The Public Smoking Gun: Exhibit A From YouTube
The terrifying reality of this system is not a secret; the regime proudly broadcasts it. On March 7, during the Fourth Session of the 14th National People's Congress, state media published official video documentation of Xi Jinping addressing the military and armed police delegation (as captured in documented broadcasts: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2h645_8Orso](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2h645_8Orso)).
In this address, the totalitarian mechanics were laid bare to the world. Xi explicitly proclaimed that "the military is the one holding the gun barrels; there must absolutely be no room for anyone with a divided loyalty to the Party"[00:01:58]. He commanded that the system must "persist in the Party controlling the military, the Party controlling cadres, and the Party controlling industries... converting the Party’s leadership advantage into developmental advantage"[00:03:06].
This is the ultimate, undeniable proof for global entities like FATF and FinCEN. When the ruler of a nuclear-armed regime publicly confirms that lawmakers holding the guns have no right to independent thought, and that the judiciary and all domestic industries are strictly weaponized under "Party control," any pretense of independent corporate transparency or legitimate anti-money laundering compliance is shattered. The GFW, the corporate proxy loopholes, and global illicit finance networks are not bugs—they are the tightly monitored "blade of the knife" directed by Xi Jinping himself.
Exhibit Analysis: Official Media Confession of Absolute Control and Failure of Judicial Independence in the PRC
Source: China News Service (Official PRC State Media)
Video Title:The Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the CCP Central Committee Holds a Meeting to Hear Work Reports from the Leading Party Groups of the National People's Congress Standing Committee, the State Council, the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, the Supreme People's Court, and the Supreme People's Black Procuratorate; Xi Jinping, General Secretary of the CCP Central Committee, Presided Over the Meeting.
This official broadcast by China News Service provides a definitive, un-coerced judicial admission (In Flagrante Delicto) demonstrating that the People's Republic of China (PRC) operates not as a sovereign nation under the rule of law, but as a Special Purpose Entity (SPE) entirely consolidated under the absolute management of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and its central military leadership.
According to the broadcast, the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau convened a full-day session to formally hear the mandatory "work reports" delivered by the leadership of the nation’s highest legislative body (National People's Congress), the executive branch (State Council), and the highest judicial organs (the Supreme People's Court and the Supreme People's Procuratorate). The official rhetoric explicitly praises this dynamic as a critical institutional arrangement designed to enforce "the Party’s absolute, comprehensive leadership" and to guarantee that all branches of power "ensure identical goals, walk in lockstep, and form a unified force" (形成合力).
From an international auditing and anti-money laundering (AML) perspective, this public record establishes a severe and irreversible Material Weakness (Internal Control Failure) via management collusion:
De-Facto Corporate Fraud: While the nominal PRC Constitution purports that the judiciary and the State Council are accountable to the legislature, this video confirms that all distinct branches are merely subordinate operational units. They report directly to, and take binding commands from, a single ultimate controlling party: General Secretary Xi Jinping.
The Mechanism of Institutional Concealment: This structure explains how systemic atrocities and institutional fraud—ranging from the historical cover-up of the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre to the strict blockades surrounding military pathogen research between 2015 and 2019—are seamlessly concealed. In this system, the agency responsible for generating fraudulent compliance vouchers (the Legislature), the entity carrying out state actions (the Executive), and the bodies tasked with suppressing evidence and whistleblowers (the Judiciary) are financially, operationally, and politically consolidated under the same supreme authority.
Global Compliance Implications: For international tribunals, sanctions-enforcement bodies, and financial intelligence units (such as FinCEN or the FATF), this video serves as an irrefutable piece of evidence. It demonstrates that no commercial entity, nominal shareholder, or judicial decree originating from the PRC possesses genuine institutional independence. By openly showcasing this "unified command," the CCP has legally signed off on its own liability attribution, permanently barring the regime from claiming a "lack of knowledge" or attributing systemic malfeasance to "unauthorized local actors." Under its own supreme operational protocol, the CCP central leadership holds 100% joint and several liability for all actions undertaken by the PRC state apparatus.
Exhibit C: The Institutionalized Immunity Infrastructure for Chinese Military and Bio-Tech Elite
A critical forensic discovery in China’s judicial framework is the Supreme People's Court’s official directive, Fa-Fa [2011] No. 14 ("Several Opinions on Comprehensively Strengthening the Work of Accepting Supervision"). This document exposes how the highest court of the PRC has functionally legally institutionalized a collusive protection mechanism for the regime's military, bio-tech, and political elite.
Under Fa-Fa [2011] No. 14, all levels of PRC courts are mandated to integrate the "handling of matters of concern" raised by delegates of the National People's Congress (NPC) and the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) directly into the court's performance evaluation, funding allocation, and disciplinary accountability metrics. Judges who fail to satisfy these political insiders face severe professional retaliation and docking of operational budgets.
When this directive is audited alongside the roster of CPPCC members, its sinister nature becomes clear. The CPPCC includes key military and biological warfare actors, such as PLA Major General Chen Wei, PLA Major General Cao Xuetao, Wuhan Institute of Virology Director Wang Yanyiand her husband Shu Hongbing, alongside ultimate regime controllers like Peng Liyuan (wife of Xi Jinping) and Wang Huning.
In forensic legal terms, this directive means that independent judicial investigations into PRC biosecurity atrocities, defense procurement fraud, or human rights violations are legally impossible inside China. If an independent whistleblower or victim attempts to sue or investigate the leadership of the Wuhan Institute of Virology or the PLA Medical Command, the defendants—by virtue of their CPPCC status—can trigger Fa-Fa [2011] No. 14 to force the presiding judges into compliance. The Supreme Court has effectively engineered a constitutional safe-harbor for state-sponsored criminals, proving that the PRC judiciary acts as the ultimate shredder of evidence and legal shield for the regime’s weaponized scientific and military complex.